Plenaries came from Katy Börner and Reinhard Schneider, with other talks by Nick Holliman, Sara Fabrikant, Achilleas Frangakis and Jessie Kennedy. A splendid poster session and some stunning computer-based demonstrations showed the range of activities and software that is being developed and deployed for visualisation purposes. There was a huge amount of interesting material, too much to review properly, and so I shall be egregiously selective. Katy Börner talked about a variety of Science of Science tools she and her colleagues have developed for looking at science funding, networks and the like; the portal is here, and some of the interesting findings of the formal aspects of team science have recently been summarised. I blogged before about the wonderful scimaps exhibition, and a new book contains many of the relevant graphics.

I also attended our ‘next generation’ conference, not of DNA sequencing methods but of our PhD students and postdocs. I was able to hear an unusual presentation by Peter Cook before providing some of my own thoughts in a dinner speech. I managed to talk to a good number of the delegates, and thereby came to hear about a lot of very interesting projects that we are funding.

Regarding networks, this week saw the publication of an update of the community consensus paper of the yeast metabolic network. It should be a useful resource for those wishing to do industrial biotechnology using this organism.

Other papers that caught my eye included one on the benefits to be had from using knowledge of biochemical pathways to improve the signal in genome-wide association studies and another pointing up the epigenetic differences between queen and worker bees. Certainly the analysis of the epigenomes of next generation scientists will require some very good visualisation tools!